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STATEMENT BY FORMER POLITICAL PRISONERS AND EXILES AND THEIR RELATIVES
Fundaah
#1 Posted : Monday, June 07, 2010 10:03:19 AM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 11/19/2008
Posts: 1,267
THIS IS THE CONSTITUTIONAL MOMENT:
A STATEMENT BY VICTIMS OF REPRESSION

We, former prisoners of conscience, political exiles and spouses, widows, parents, sons and daughters of former victims of KANU dictatorship under presidents Kenyatta and Moi have keenly and critically observed and actively participated in the developments towards the retirement of the enslaving independence constitution (with its myriad retrogressive amendments) and ushering in of a new, democratic one. As still gaping wounds of half a century of tyranny, we are both excited and alarmed. Excited because the cause for which we were jailed, tortured, ostracized by both the state and sections of society and economically marginalized is at the verge of turning the final bend. Alarmed because, determined as ever, the forces of tyranny, plunder and retrogression have once again regrouped in last ditch attempt to deny the people of Kenya their deserved prize of a new dawn of freedom and empowerment.
It is in view of the foregoing that we elect to highlight the following as Kenyans prepare to cast their vote for a new Constitution in August:

Our History has been that of Constant Struggle between Forces of Change and Those of Reaction

The Kenyan people take great pride in their long history of resistance to forces of foreign occupation and internal repression. This heroic history stretches way back from the struggles led by patriots like Yusuf bin Hassan in the 16th Century against Portuguese occupation to the current one for the realization of a new constitution based on democracy, social justice and subsidiarity. But the people of Kenya are also well aware that at each stage of the struggle, there have been forces of reaction and sabotage.

When patriotic Kenyans like Waiyaki wa Hinga, Me Katilili, Koitalel arap Samoei, Mwangeka, Odera Ulalo and others fought to resist the alienation of Kenyan land and enslavement of our people, the colonizing brigade found ready collaborators in the likes of Lenana, Mumia, Odera Akang’o and Tengecha.
On the workers front, we had progressive trade union leaders like Markhan Singh, Cege Kibacia and Fred Kubai pitted against reactionary forces coalescing around the Tom Mboya-fronted Kenya Federation of Labour. The Kenya Land and Freedom Army (Mau Mau) had its counterforce in the Homeguards and Komoreras.

In the post-independence Kenya, we had progressive forces revolving around Jaramogi Odinga, Bildad Kaggia, Abdilatif Abdala and Pio Gama Pinto among others. In the university faculties, progressive academics, among them them Ngugi wa Thiong’o, Maina wa Kinyatti, the late Katama Mkangi, the late Oki Ooko Ombaka, the late Mukaru Ng’ang’a, to name but a sample held aloft the banner of struggle. They were opposed, spied on and betrayed by a cabal that came to be christened “Nyayo Professors.” They were opposed, harassed and detained without trial – some assassinated – by the reactionaries led by Kenyatta and Moi. These praxes had to be repeated at every stage of the struggle – in student leadership where names like James Orengo, Chelegat Mutai, the late Mwakudua wa Mwachofi and the late Ng’ang’a Thiong’o top the Roll of Honour. In the churches and in the mosques, progressive clerics like the late Bishop Alexander Muge, the late Henry Okullu and the late Sheikh Ahmed Khalif and Sheikh Khalid Balala. All these and others have been confronted with forces bent on defending, preserving and enhancing the status quo.

It was, thus, no accident that when Kenyans could no longer bear with the repression of Moi-KANU regime and launched in earnest the struggle for restoration of multiparty democracy, Moi nad reactionary forces launched a vicious, semi-fascist outfit in the infamous Youth for KANU ’92.
The alignment of forces as currently witnessed is as natural as flies congregate around faeces.

Reign of arbitrary Arrests, Torture, Detentions and Disappearances

In order to contain forces of justice, progress and freedom, the reactionary forces used raw terror – including extra-judicial executins and “disappearances” to preserve “national security.”: Let the victims of Moi Nyayo House talk for themselves.
Maina wa Kinyatti: “I was ordered to strip naked and sit down on a chair. My hands were chained to the chair and I could not move at all. From the moment the brutal interrogation started, everything in the room changed and the language of coercion and violence was introduced.”
The late Ng’ang’a Thiong’o’s incarceration at Nyayo House was not to be erased from his mind: “The hood was removed and there I was in a dark cell. The next morning I was put in a lift while blind folded and upon landing several floors above I was taken into a room, put on a seat and there I found myself in front of nine mean-looking guys.
‘Tell us about yourself, your friends and your involvement in the struggle,’ the interrogation began. Questions and more questions for hours without end were followed by beatings with slaps, kicks, whips, wooden pieces of wood and burning with cigarette ends.
“My screams did not help and as they continued brutalising me, they were insisting that I confess all that I knew or they would kill me. After collapsing due to exhaustion, I was returned to the basement cells. The guards were instructed to continue with the beatings.
The beatings continued relentlessly and only the methods varied. One day, they would remove pistols and threaten to shoot me. There were screams from the neighbouring rooms with men screaming at the tops of their voices. I lost count of the days and time, whether it was day or night. It was a total nightmare.
Cornels Akello Onyango was dazed when a beautiful young brown woman menacingly approached him brandishing a razor blade. “Get ready to be circumcised,” she barked as she walked towards him.
For him, the fact that the threat was coming from a woman was a shock in itself. The look on her face left no doubt that she was capable of carrying out the threat.
Onyango, stark naked, frightened and his mind in a turmoil, was in front of a group of about 10 stone-faced men.
The looks on their faces left no doubt in his mind that at some stage the encounter would develop into a violent and vicious confrontation.
Onyango’s experience illustrates a fraction of the suffering, denigration, humiliation, physical and mental abuse of the victims and survivors of the Nyayo House torture chambers and other places of detention during the Moi regime
Waweru Kariuki: “While in the cells, I heard a woman and children crying. I did not know where the sounds were coming from. Later, the interrogator came to my cell and told me that my wife was there with my children and had confessed. The interrogator had a gun that he used to intimidate me. He told me either to confess or be shot.”
It was later learnt that all the noises were simulated and piped into the cells as a form of psychological torture.
“A brown, pretty woman speaking English and Kiswahili with a Kikuyu accent, was brought to the cell in the basement. I was brought to the open space between the toilet and the control room. She started interrogating me in a persuasive manner urging me to confess. She fondled me, taunting me. She told me that my wife and children had been brought there but I would not be allowed to see them.
“The interrogators then came and found us talking with the brown woman. They reprimanded me and tied my testicles using rubber bands. It was very painful. In the meantime, the brown woman was burning me on my thighs, organ and scrotum with a cigarette.”
Spouses of Mwakenya suspects were also not spared by the torturers.
Emma Ainea Weyula, a copy typist in the ministry of Education, was arrested together with her husband on November 29, 1990 in Milimani Estate, Bungoma Township. She was recovering from a caesarean operation that she had undergone only two months earlier.
Emma tells her story: “I was arrested by a team of 14 special branch and CID men led by Superintendent Kasera, Inspector Clement Masinza and deputy DCIO Wang’ombe. There was no woman in the team. They thoroughly searched our house, slapped me and told me that my husband’s case was serious and he might not come back.
“I was bundled into the back of a car and driven to the Bungoma Police Station a few minutes after they had driven off with my husband in a Land Rover. At the police station, we stood outside and they started interrogating me.
“During the interrogation, they wanted to know more about my husband, Cornelius Mulumia, especially his activities in Mwakenya and other underground movements that I did not know about. They also wanted to know if I had any idea of the allegedly seditious documents which they had taken from our house, and if Koigi wa Wamwere and Raila Odinga had ever visited us.
They later took the typewriter from my office at the ministry of education to compare with the characters of the machine that had typed the documents found in our house. For the 14 days I stayed in custody I felt as if it was 10 years. All this time my young children, a daughter aged 5 and a son aged 3, were under the care of my neighbours.”
The Bill of Rights (Chapter 4) in the Proposed Constitution makes this barbarism a thing of the past.

Land is the Issue of Contention

At the centre of the National Question is land. Kenya inherited a highly skewed system of land ownership at independence in 1963. British colonialism in Kenya was not merely administrative. Rather, it was accompanied by massive and widespread land alienation for the benefit of settler agriculture. As a result the best agricultural land-the White Highlands and the adjacent rangelands were taken from the Africans, without compensation, and parceled out to white settlers. Colonial legislation was enacted to legalize this process. As a result, whole communities lost valuable land that they had occupied over generations. The customary land tenure systems under which Africans had guaranteed claims over the land they occupied were supplanted by the registration of individual title holders under the colonial system.

Independence failed to reverse this loss of African land. The colonial legislation protecting the rights of the land title holders was inherited by the first post-independence government of President Jomo Kenyatta. The Constitution negotiated at Lancaster House in London, provided for an elaborate protection of private property without reference to the history of its acquisition. The successive post-independence governments have continued to uphold the sanctity of privately owned land to the frustration of the large number of Kenyans who had been dispossessed through colonialism leaving them squatters on their ancestral land or landless poor. This situation demands an equitable land distribution process that is capable of providing livelihood opportunities to the landless poor as well as redressing colonial wrongs and re-establishing justice in the land sector.

As the struggle for independence ensued and the colonial rule looked destined to a sad chapter of history, a new ruling class with interest in landed property was quickly recruited from amongst African collaborators. With the help of the colonial state, the new gentry quickly occupied land belonging to entire communities – that had been herded into detention camps and concentration villages – and were awarded titles by the colonial authorities. Upon the attainment of independence, the new rulers could not relinquish their claim to these lands but came up with a scheme of settling the new landless in former settler areas (which had been alienated through force or treachery). It is instructive to observe that the epicentre of land-related clashes has been the agriculturally-rich Rift Valley region. This is no accident. Rift Valley is the most settled region of Kenya. It is also in the Rift Valley where communities like the Maasai, the Pokot and the Nandi have unresolved grievances over land ownership centred on historical injustices traceable to colonial occupation.
It was in the Rift Valley where British settlers alienated huge tracts of land from indigenous Kenyans (paying a mere 10 cents per acre to the crown, not to the owners). It was in the Rift Valley where the Maasai community was duped into signing a 100-year agreement with the British in 1904 and denied a hearing by Kibaki government (a successor to the colonial administration) in 2004 when the agreement had elapsed. It is in the Rift Valley where the Pokot were forcefully pushed out of their communal land.

Land grabbing, which has been used for political patronage, combined with land tenure reform, has concentrated mainly in freehold title registration without regard to distributive justice and has escalated further the oppression and marginalisation of the indigenous Rift Valley and coastal people.
It is not an accident that former President Moi leads the “NO” brigade. According to October 1, 2004 issue of The East African Standard, Moi is known to own 20, 000 acres in Bahati, 1,600 acres Kabarak Farm on which he has retired. The former President owns another 20, 000 acres in Olenguruoni in Rift Valley, on which he is growing tea and has also built the Kiptakich Tea Factory. He also has some 20, 000 acres in Molo. He also has another 3, 000-acre farm in Bahati on both sides of the Nakuru/Nyahururu road where he grows coffee and some 400 acres in Nakuru on which he was initially growing coffee.
The retired President also owns the controversy ridden 50, 000 acre Ol Pajeta Farm part of which has Ol Pajeta Ranch in Rumuruti, Laikipia. In 2003, the family put out an advert in the press warning the public that some unknown people were sub-dividing and selling it.
Most of the other Moi family land is held in the names of his sons and daughters and other close family members.
The extended Kenyatta family alone owns an estimated 500,000 acres –approximately the size of Nyanza Province according to estimates by independent surveyors and Ministry of Lands officials.
The proposed constitution provides the people of Kenya with an opportunity to once for all address the issue of injustice in land ownership, tenure and utilization.

Empowering Women

Women have been the central pillars of our long struggle for emancipation. The history of our struggle against colonialism and neo-colonialism is incomplete without mention of the roles of Me Katilili, Moraa, Mary Nyanjiru, Field Marshall Muthoni, Micere Mugo and Wangari Maathai among others. Can we forget the mothers of political prisoners who bared it all at the Freedom Corner to have their sons freed? These are women who dared to speak the truth to power. Yet our women continue to be domestic slaves; because petty housework crushes, strangles, stultifies and degrades them, chains them to the kitchen and the nursery, and wastes their labour on barbarously unproductive, petty, nerve-racking, crushing drudgery. The Proposed Constitution proposes to restore our women’s full rights and dignity and gives them a role at the Boardroom, at cabinet, at the farm and firm decision organs – beyond the bedroom, nursery and kitchen.

National Values and Principles of Governance

For the first time since the establishment of Kenya as a nation, national values are postulated in the Constitution and backed by a strong, comprehensive regime of human rights and freedoms. As persons who have been arrested arbitrarily and/or our families subjected to gross abuse of fundamental human rights and denied enjoyment of basic freedoms – including torture and inhuman treatment, detentions without trial, denial of rights to work, education and practice profession or trade – we fully endorse these values as espoused in the Proposed Constitution.

Citizen Moi Has No Moral Authority to Lecture Kenyans on New Constitution

As President for close to a quarter of a century, Daniel arap Moi became the example of tyranny in Africa and the world. Many young women and men are orphans because their parents were deprived of life as result of Moi’s reign of terror. Many are those who have been rendered landless due to Moi’s insatiable appetite for land. Scores of Kenyans met their early deaths and continue to die from lack of health facilities and drugs in hospitals, accidents caused by decayed physical infrastructure and hunger occasioned by corruption institutionalized by Moi and bequeathed to his KANU offspring. Moi and Moists have rubbished, opposed, sabotaged the quest for a democratic constitution all the way as Kenyans demanded it. Once again, Moi and his YK92 brigade have regrouped and are standing on the way of Kenyans who hunger for a new constitutional dispensation. As bleeding wounds of Moi terror rule, while we don’t begrudge Citizen Moi his right to express himself freely, his history of misrule does not qualify him to lecture Kenyans on what makes a good or bad constitution. Kenyans are better off without it such unsolicited counsel.

Dated this 6th day of June 2010 and signed:

Isaiah 65:17-Look! I am creating new heavens and a new earth, and no one will even think about the old ones anymore
Apple Bees
#2 Posted : Tuesday, June 08, 2010 11:54:01 AM
Rank: Member


Joined: 7/5/2008
Posts: 390
key points please!!!
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